A federal jury made a divided verdict against the ex -president of the Illinois House, Michael Madigan seven other accounts.
The jury was blocked after ten days of deliberations over the six cases against the co-accused of Madigan, Michael McClain, a long time lobbyist and a state legislator to which he referred to throughout the trial more than three months like three months. to Madigan’s fixer, confidant and carrying.
The bribe and conspirating posts involved Bills Madigan had helped to pass or be related to the favors he was looking for of the utilities, such as practices for students in his south -Chicago Ward or Lucrative Free. to comè
The former COMED CEO, Anne Pramaggiore, was sentenced to a separate trial for favors made by Madigan and McClain. The former General Counsel of Electrical Utility, Thomas O’Neill, testified against Madigan when he took the position at McClain’s trial, which began last October.
Some of the culprits against Madigan have been in prison for a maximum of 20 years, according to the United States Prosecutor’s Office. No date has yet been set for the 82 -year -old sentence. The convictions are a sharp fall for Madigan, who was the legislative leader with the highest service in the history of the United States when he left in 2021.
Madigan, a Democrat on the south side -Chicago’s west, won for the first time in Springfield in 1971 and won the speaker’s Gavel in 1983. He kept it for all two years less than 1983 and 2021 before to lose the speaker’s election to the current talk of the house of Illinois Chris Welch, another Democrat. Republicans won the House in 1995 and celebrated it until 1997 when Madigan returned to the speaker’s office. He chaired the chamber for 36 total years.
United States lawyer in the northern district of Illinois Morris Pasqual said it was too early to make a decision on a recovery on the lock accounts.
Madigan was portrayed by government lawyers throughout the trial as a politician willing to make offers that benefit himself and his associates to advance the legislation. In October 2022, under a deferred processing, AT&T admitted that he organized the payments to the representative of the then Illinois, Edward Acevedo, an ally of Madigan, in order to influence and reward the Madigan vote in 2017. On the legislation that would eliminate the “carrier of AT&T’s last resort” obligation to provide a fixed telephone service to all Illinois residents, which was expected to save millions of dollars to the company. Acevedo was later hired by AT&T. Acevedo and other AT&T executives testified to the test, many of them who called the “work” that Acevedo did to the comic company. Madigan also helped defeat a modification to a law that became a law in 2018 on fees for the attached files of the small cell towers that would have been detrimental to AT&T.
Comed, electrical utility, presented a deferred processing with the Government by 2020, paid a fine of $ 200 million and agreed to cooperate with the investigation. O’Neill’s testimony explained how McClain, who was sentenced last year with Pramaggiore and others in independent trial, facilitated the advancement of the 2011 legislation on the room of the House in exchange for A number of invoicable hours that Comed paid to the Lobbist Victor Reyes, practices in the practices. For students in the Madigan Room and other political favors.
A failed terrestrial agreement in the Chicago Chicago district was also among the bribe’s positions that Madigan was convicted. The ex -Chicago Alderman, Danny Soils, wore a wire for the FBI, recorded Madigan at meetings and testified against Madigan in exchange for his own treatment.
The ten counts that Madigan was convicted include the burden of bribe conspiracy related to the Comene Help of Solis to run business in the private law firm of Madigan.
“The bribe, whether the old fashionable cash in an envelope, or the most refined version practiced by Madigan, is still illegal, is still corrupt, it is still against the law, and it still decreases the confidence of the public in the Government, “Pasqual said that after the verdict he was read in the federal court of Everett McKinley Dirksen in Chicago.
Although Madigan could face up to 20 years in prison for the most serious sentences for wire fraud, he will probably receive a minor sentence due to his age and other factors.